Monthly Archives: December 2015

In chapter 4 the writer introduced his readers to the boldness by which we can now approach God through our “great high priest who has passed through the heavens.”4:14 In view of our mediator Jesus who is now our high priest at the right hand of God,8:1 “… let us come boldly to the throne of grace, so that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.”4:16 We can have boldness to approach unto God through Jesus because He “was in all things tempted as we are ….”4:15

In chapter 10 the writer gave the reason by which we can have boldness before God. By a new and living way we can have “boldness to enter into the holy place by the blood of Jesus.”10:19 Through our obedience to the gospel, the blood of Jesus has been appropriated unto our souls, and thus we do not enter into the holy place by our works or perfect keeping of law, all of which come short in making us just before the One we seek to approach. It is the cleansing blood of Jesus that gives us boldness, for we know that we can come before the One against whom we sin by having been cleansed of our sins. He is thus the One who remembers our sins and iniquities no more.10:17 “So we may boldly say, ‘The Lord is my helper and I will not fear.”13:6

In the section of encouragement found in Hebrews 12:18-25, the writer seeks to remind those who are tempted to draw back from the blood that they “have not come to a mountain that might be touched and that burned with fire.”12:18 They are not in a situation as Israel was at the foot of Mount Sinai. The heavenly mountain unto which we have now come was not as the mountain from which God spoke to the nation of Israel. The physical circumstances that surrounded the giving of the law on Mount Sinai must have been terrifying to the Israelites who stood at the foot of the mountain (See Ex 19 & 20). The mountain burned with fire. Anyone who dared to touch it would be consumed. There was fire, thunder, lightning on the mountain, and danger everywhere as God came down on the mountain to deliver the law to Moses. The danger was so imminent that even if some unfortunate animal touched the mountain that animal was to be stoned to death. The people recoiled in fear at the sight and sound. Even Moses was exceedingly fearful, and thus, cried out to God, “I exceedingly fear and tremble.”12:21

Now in contrast to that scene of terror, the writer encourages us by saying that we “have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels …”12:22 Through the blood of Jesus, we can come boldly to the throne of grace. We have come “to Jesus, the mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than the blood of Abel.”12:24 Therefore, the writer cautions us that we “do not refuse Him who speaks.”12:25 Those who violated the sanctity of Mount Sinai when the law was given, did not escape punishment. God spoke to them from the mountain on the earth, and thus, they could not escape. “For if they did not escape when they refused Him who spoke on earth, much less will we escape if we turn away from Him who speaks from heaven.”12:25

Writing in view of the coming judgment on national Israel in A.D. 70, the writer compares the shaking of the earth when the law was given and the covenant instituted with national Israel, with the time in a few years when both will be shaken out of existence. “Yet once more I will shake not only the earth, but also heaven.”12:26 And this “yet-once-more” signified “the removing of those things that can be shaken.”12:27 And those things that can be shaken are those things that were temporary. The law brought Israel to Christ, but now it was time for the custodians of the law to be shaken, for the law had been nailed to the cross. When the Jews obeyed the gospel, they were made dead to the law. They became “dead to the law through the body of Christ.” (Rm 7:4). They had been baptized into the body of Christ (1 Co 12:13), and now they were no longer under that which was fading away. They were “receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken.”12:28 In view of the fact that “our God is a consuming fire,”12:29 it is incumbent on us to hold on to the present kingdom reign of Jesus our high priest that will never be shaken. We have received the kingdom reign of Jesus. It is indeed comforting to be reminded of the following words in reference to the present high priesthood of our Lord Jesus Christ:

You [the Father] have put all things in subjection under His feet. For in subjecting all things to Him, He left nothing that is not put under Him. But now we do not yet see all things put under Him.2:8

[Thank you for your faithf study. Acts 17:11]

This series of lectures is BOOK 65 that is now available in the Biblical Research Library at www.africainternational.org

By chapter 11, the Hebrew writer has concluded his arguments for one to remain faithful. He has warned against apostasy from the sacrificial blood of Jesus with the statement, “The just will live by faith.”10:38 If one would live justified before God, therefore, he must totally trust in God and the current ministry of Jesus Christ on behalf of the sons of God.

The writer concluded chapter 10 with a warning that those to whom he was writing should guard themselves against returning to the futility of animal sacrifices and the inferior Levitical priesthood. In reaffirming that the justified will live by faith, he wants to remind his readers of the faith that they must maintain. He called on them to “remember the former days in which, after you were enlightened, you endured a great conflict of suffering.”10:32 He thus encouraged them to be “of those who believe to the saving of the soul.”10:39

They indeed needed the following exhortation: “For you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise.”10:36 Their confidence in the blood sacrifice of Jesus “has great reward.”10:35 But if they allowed their faith to wane in the face of persecution, then there will be no reward, but “a fearful thing” of falling “into the hands of the living God.”10:31

Chapter 11 is the writer’s final exhortation and encouragement to remain faithful. After giving illustrations of enduring faith, he will come to the conclusion, “These all died in faith, not having received the promises.”11:13 But those to whom he was writing had received the promises, and thus, there was no excuse for them.

Several illustrations of faith are presented. But there is something interesting about many of those he personally named. These heroes of faith lived before the giving of the Sinai law. “By faith Abel offered to God a more excellent sacrifice ….”11:4 “By faith Enoch was taken up ….”11:5 “By faith Noah … moved with fear, prepared an ark ….”11:7 “By faith Abraham … obeyed ….”11:8 “Through faith even Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed.”11:11 All these remained faithful though they did not experience the fulfillment of the promises. “But having seen them afar off were assured of them and embraced them ….”11:13

The argument of the Hebrew writer is very powerful. He is writing to Jewish Christians about Gentiles who lived before the existence of the nation of Israel, even before the event of Jesus and the cross. These faithful heroes had not witnessed the dividing of the Red Sea. They had not witnessed the terrifying event of God descending on Mount Sinai in order to establish a covenant with His people and deliver His commandments. They had not witnessed the enduring youth of Moses as he walked among them for forty years without growing old. The pre-Sinai heroes of faith had no history of how God worked through the judges and prophets of Israel. Their endurance was based solely on their faith in God and His promises. We must conclude that the Hebrew writer wants to somewhat embarrass those of his readership who were thinking about giving up on Christ, even though they had all the knowledge of the Christ.

Those to whom the Hebrew writer addressed his message, as well as we who live today, are totally without excuse if we follow the trail of dogs and pigs back to vomit and mire. The apostate Christian has no excuse for insulting the sacrificial Son of God with a life of denial. With all the miraculous testimony that God has given through Jesus and the apostles, any who would fall from the grace of God after the cross are without excuse. Jesus had this in mind when He said in reference to those Jews who refused to believe in Him, “If I had not come and spoken to them, they would have no sin. But now they have no excuse for their sin” (Jn 15:22). The Son of God stood before them and worked the supernatural power of God. And yet, they would not believe. Paul had the same concept in mind when he wrote of those who refused to listen to the testimony of the created world:

For the invisible things of Him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and divinity, so that they are without excuse (Rm 1:20).

This was certainly in the mind of the Hebrew writer who spoke of those who would turn away from the awesome testimony of God through the resurrected Son. They condemned themselves in following after a dead covenant and law that had long been nailed to the cross. Therefore, “if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins.”10:26 For those who chose to reject all of God’s historical witness to the sonship of Jesus Christ, the Hebrew writer stated that “… it is impossible … to renew them again to repentance, since they crucify to themselves the Son of God and put Him to open shame.”6:4,6

Harsh warnings are in order for those who would fall from their faith that Jesus is the Christ and Son of God. Once one has forsaken his belief that Jesus is the Christ and Son of God, he has denied the foundation upon which Jesus built the church (See Mt 16:18,19). Therefore, what some were contemplating was truly trampling under foot the blood of the Son of God. If one leaves the foundation upon which the church of Jesus Christ is built, then he has left the fold of the saved and returned to a religion that will profit him nothing in reference to eternal existence.

We must not miss this point. Throughout all the arguments of Hebrews, there is one central theme. Peter concurred with this theme in the following statement: “And there is salvation in no other, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (At 4:12).

This is the proposition of Hebrews. All those religions of the world whose adherents do not believe that which was set forth by the Hebrew writer concerning the Son of God, are only the futile efforts of religious people who invent religions that conform to their own desires by seeking to shun accountability for their sins. If salvation were based on ignorance of Jesus, then there would have been no reason for Him to incarnate into this world. If salvation were based on ignorance of Jesus, then one would have to assume the argument that one can be saved through meritorious works, regardless of what he believes. One would have to conclude, therefore, that there is atonement in good works. It is for this reason that the Hebrew writer argues earnestly and convincingly with those who were about to give up the grace that was revealed through Jesus, and return to a meritorious system of law-keeping wherein there never was forgiveness of sins through animal blood.

Those heroes of faith who died without realizing in their lives the promises of God, trusted that God would eventually bring forth the One who would redeem them. They walked by faith in “having seen them [the fulfillment of the promises] afar off,” and thus by faith they “were assured of them and embraced them.”11:13

It is faith that focuses our minds on that which is before us, not on that which is behind. There is a little “Lot’s wife” in all of us, since we often seek to turn back to a life that is consumed with this world. But Jesus warned, “No one, after putting his hand to the plow and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God” (Lk 9:62). In this manner, the heroes of faith that the Hebrew writer uses as an illustration of faith, were those who were determined to look forward, not backward. Because they “confessed that they were foreigners and pilgrims on the earth”11:13 through their faithfulness, they declared “plainly that they seek a homeland.”11:14 “And indeed if they had been thinking of that country from which they came out, they would have had opportunity to return.”11:15 But they were as Paul:

Brethren, I count not myself to have laid hold. But one thing I do, forgetting those things that are behind and reaching forward to those things that are before (Ph 3:13).

The reason the Christian looks forward is because he desires “a better country.”11:16 It is a heavenly country that will not pass away. Those whose faith keeps them looking forward to the heavenly country, make God proud. “God is not ashamed to be called their God ….”11:16

Because of the grandeur and finality of the sacrifice of Jesus, we can now understand why there is no forgiveness for those who would turn away from not only the person of Jesus, but also the eternal sacrifice of the cross. If the compelling arguments and statements of eternal facts that the Hebrew writer has given to this point in the book do not convince one to hold faithfully to the blood of Jesus, then there is no hope for that person. Peter’s metaphorical description of such apostates from the blood sacrifice is appropriate:

For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled in them and overcome, the latter end is worse for them than the beginning. For it would have been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than having known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them. But it has happened to them according to the true proverb, “A dog returns to his own vomit,” and, “a sow that was washed, to her wallowing in the mire”(2 Pt 2:20-22).

Peter speaks of those of whom the Hebrew writer states, “if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins”10:26 Those who turn away from the cross have made the sacrifice of the cross void in their lives because they have turned from the only hope one has for eternal salvation. There is a condition, therefore, for enjoying the eternal blessing of the sacrifice of the Son of God. The condition is to walk faithfully in the light of the covenant conditions (1 Jn 1:7).

The Hebrew writer is specific in reference to the apostate who turns from the sacrifice of Jesus. He is emphatic in the following statement:

For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift … if they fall away, to renew them again to repentance, since they crucify to themselves the Son of God and put Him to open shame.6:4,6

Two things are certain that we can draw from this pronouncement of the Hebrew writer: First, one must willingly be drawn to the cross sacrifice of Jesus lest he fall away. There is no such thing as being destined by God to be drawn to the cross. Being drawn to the sacrificial offering of Jesus must be based on one’s own choice. If one is predestined to be born into this salvation, then Jesus’ use of the word “drawn” would be meaningless and without emotion. Why would He even speak of being drawn to the sacrifice of the cross if God had predestined one to do so without his own volition? Being drawn infers individual volition and emotion, not prompting by the Holy Spirit, or preprogramming by God.

Second, once one is drawn to the cross, he or she must obediently submit to being born again. But there is no guarantee that once he is saved by obedience to the gospel he will continue to be saved. Every statement of Scripture that speaks of Christians falling from the faith is a teaching against the misunderstanding that once one is saved, he cannot fall away. The entire audience to whom the Hebrew writer was addressing his arguments of the book was on the verge of apostasy from the priesthood and sacrifice of Jesus. Those who would assert that once one was saved he cannot fall from the grace of God, are not comprehending the book of Hebrews. The writer was addressing Christians. They had been Christians for many years. But now they were on the verge of forsaking the blood and present ministry of Jesus, and thus, putting Jesus to an open shame. They were giving up the blood sacrifice, and like dogs and pigs, returning to their former religiosity of futile sacrifices.

The Hebrew writer’s statement of 10:26 is a complete refutation of those who believe that once one is saved by the blood sacrifice of Jesus, that he is continually and forever saved, and thus, cannot fall. The writer’s illustration of the truth of verse 26 goes back to the Sinai law of Moses. Under that law, “anyone who has set aside Moses’ law died without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses”10:28 (See Dt 17:2-6; 19:15). If the testimony of two or three witnesses was sufficient to have one condemned to stoning under the Sinai law, then the testimony of one’s rejection of the sacrificial blood of Jesus will be revealed when one stands before Jesus Himself in final judgment (2 Co 5:10). What is awaiting those who would stand before Jesus without His blood is nothing but terrifying destruction at the time of the final coming of Jesus (2 Th 1:6-9). What is awaiting is “a certain fearful expectation of judgment and fiery indignation that will devour the adversaries.”10:27

If telling the old story of Jesus from the word of God does not stir emotion, then we are cold in reference to the cross. The Holy Spirit has revealed the knowledge of the cross in the Bible. It is our responsibility as disciples of Jesus to grow in this revealed knowledge of the truth. If we conclude that it takes a direct act of the Holy Spirit to generate any emotional response to the cross, then we are saying that the Spirit failed in revealing the knowledge of the cross through the written word of God. We make the Spirit pick and choose those in whom He would generate a response. And if no emotional response to the cross is generated, then we want to blame the Spirit.

We must keep in mind that the Holy Spirit did not blame Himself for the Hebrews’ dullness of hearing the story of the old rugged cross. Those dull of hearing could only blame themselves. It is not the work of the Spirit in our lives to keep us emotionally charged about the sacrifice of the cross. We can blame only ourselves if we fall into a state wherein it is impossible for us to be renewed to faithfulness. When our dullness embarrasses the Son of God, then it is not the Holy Spirit who is to be blamed.

The words of the Hebrew writer in this text are meant to terrify any Christian who would by chance even consider turning from the blood of the cross. In view of the profound arguments and statements of fact that he has already made in the previous chapters concerning who Jesus is and what He did on the cross, and how He now ministers on behalf of the saints, he asks his readers a question that he knows they can answer correctly:

Of how much severer punishment do you suppose will he be thought worthy who has trodden under foot the Son of God, and has counted as a common thing the blood of the covenant by which he was sanctified, and has insulted the Spirit of grace?10:29

Those who have turned from the blood of the cross, and the existing intercession of Jesus from the right hand of God, are truly like the dogs who return to eating their own vomit. They are like pigs who were washed, but then again return to filth. If two or three witnesses could condemn the lawbreaker of the law of Moses, then in horror will be the words of Jesus in the final day who have turned from Him: “Depart from Me you cursed into everlasting fire that is prepared for the devil and his angels” (Mt 25:41). Those who would turn away from the eternal sacrifice of the Son of God will suffer an eternal destruction, for they have “insulted the Spirit of grace.”10:29 And for this reason, “It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.”10:31

We must not deceive ourselves. God says, “Vengeance is Mine.”10:30 “The Lord will judge His people.”10:30 If one claims to be a child of God, then certainly with fear and trembling he or she should guard their walk in the light of His Son’s will. The Hebrew writer reminds his readers of the words of God: “But if any man draws back, My soul will have no pleasure in him.”10:38 If any would “draw back,” then he will “draw back to destruction.”10:39 So if anyone would ask concerning the Hebrew writer and those faithful with him, he would reply, “But we are not of those who draw back to destruction, but of those who believe to the saving of the soul.”10:39

In Conan Doyle’s book, The History of the Boer War, Doyle described one of the skirmishes that the British soldiers had with an overpowering South African Boer (farmer) regiment during the Anglo-Boer War. The occasion was that a British regiment of soldiers was surprised at one time by a Boer regiment that was twice their number. Under fire, the British troops were able to retreat to their camp. However, many of their wounded lie in the field between the two armies, dying of their wounds. Among the British soldiers was a corporal of the Ceylon Mounted Infantry. He later reported that the British troops needed something to stop the fighting in order to help their wounded. He later recounted, “We had a pillow, but no red paint.” He recalled that some British soldiers took their own blood and made a cross on the white pillow, and held it high on a pole. They knew that the African farmers (Boers) were a God-fearing men after the spirituality of their leader, Paul Kruger. The result was that the attack was terminated by the Boers and the British were allowed to retrieve and administer to their wounded.

Hebrews 10:19-23 is a conclusion to the writer’s arguments that Jesus and His blood sacrifice are far superior to that which was only a shadow of good things to come. It was His blood that was held high on the cross in order to stop the impending annihilation of all those who sought healing from their wounds of sin.

The writer uses the conjunction “therefore” in 10:19 to lead his readers, and us, into his final conclusions. His arguments have been so strong that he will make a final statement at the end of chapter 10 that “we are not of those who draw back to destruction, but of those who believe to the saving of the soul.”10:39 We will not fall back into the futility of the insufficient sacrifices of high priests who died one after another under the Sinai law. If we do, that fall is to destruction, not life. In the preceding dissertation, the writer is confident that he has proved his point. If one would leave Jesus Christ, the Son of God, then he has gone back into that which will only lead to destruction (See 2 Th 1:6-9). The writer concludes that his readers must find a pillow and blood at the foot of the cross in order to stop the impending destruction. Jesus only can supply the blood.

“Therefore,” the writer pleads, we must have “boldness to enter into the holy place by the blood of Jesus.”10:19 Our acceptance of the atoning sacrifice of the Son of God is sufficient to bring us boldly unto the throne of God. “For through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father” (Ep 2:18). Our boldness, therefore, is not based on our meritorious works that we would presume to be sacrificial offerings for our sins. Our boldness is based totally on the blood that flows from the cross. Our right to enter into the holy place is guaranteed only by the blood of the One who has passed through the heavens to the right hand of God.8:1 Those who do not live under the sanctifying shield of His blood, therefore, have no right to enter into His presence.

Under the Sinai law, only the high priest was allowed to enter into the holy place. He could enter only if He came with the blood of animals. It would be unthinkable for the high priest to enter without sacrificial blood. If there were no sacrifices, then there could have been no entrance into the holy place.

The Hebrew writer now places us in the position of the priest who would enter the holy place. We are the holy priesthood of God (1 Pt 2:5,9). We now have the privilege of entering into the holy place “by the blood of Jesus.”10:19 If there is no blood of Jesus with us, then we cannot enter. Since Jesus has offered us His blood, then by His blood we have the right to enter. Therefore, it is necessary to determine how one would appropriate the blood of Jesus to his own soul in order to have the right to enter the holy place. If we would enter with boldness, then we must access the blood of the Son of God.

We not only enter into the holy place, but we can go beyond the veil into the holy of holies with the blood of Jesus. This is the “new and living way that He has consecrated for us.”10:20 It is “new” because it is not as the priests of the Sinai law who entered the holy place on behalf of the people with the blood of animals. As priests of God ourselves, we cannot personally enter on our own behalf. It is a “living” way because we have applied to ourselves the blood of the One who is the way. Jesus affirmed, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father but through Me” (Jn 14:6). To think that there are other ways to the Father except through Jesus, is to be detoured by our own ignorance of the sanctifying power of the blood sacrifice of Jesus (See At 4:12). We must never forget that it is only by the cleansing blood of Jesus that we are allowed into the presence of God.

By pouring out His blood on the cross, He went before us into the place He has now allowed us to go. Jesus is thus our “high priest over the house of God,” which house we are in Christ (1 Tm 3:15). When Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life,” He essentially said, “Follow Me and I will take you where no high priest on earth can take you.” He also meant that we not be detoured by man-made faiths that suppose to lead us into the eternal realm of God without the appropriation of the blood of the Lamb of God.

The Hebrew writer is so confident with these conclusions that the Spirit moved his hand to write a note of assurance. He adds that with “full assurance” we can draw near “with a sincere heart.”10:22 We now have “a better hope, through which we draw near to God.”7:19 We are able to draw near through the blood and the water. Moses sprinkled the blood of animals on the tabernacle and priests in order to sanctify (set apart) that which was to function in service to God (Ex 24; 29). With the background of this historical illustration, the Spirit directed the hand of Peter to word it differently in reference to the time when he knew that we had contacted the blood of Jesus:

The like figure whereunto even baptism does also now save us—not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the appeal of a good conscience to God—through the resurrection of Jesus Christ (1 Pt 3:21).

We can boldly draw near to God “in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from the evil conscience ….”10:22 That by which our hearts are sprinkled is the blood of Jesus. But the story is incomplete without “washing.” The writer asserts that we can “draw near with a sincere heart … having … our bodies washed with pure water.”10:22 The Hebrew writer reflects on Jesus’ words, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God” (Jn 3:5). There is no drawing near unto God without passing through the waters of baptism, wherein one comes into contact with the sanctifying blood of Jesus. Ananias meant the same when he with urgency said to a sinner, “And now why are you waiting? Arise and be baptized and wash away your sins, calling on the name of the Lord” (At 22:16).

There is no cleansing power in water. There is no salvational result from a legal obedience to “being baptized.” It is only at the moment of baptism that we can have a good conscience toward God. It is only then that we know that we have done all that was required of Him to come into contact with the blood of His Son. It is then that we can have a good conscience before God, knowing that we have obediently completed all that He requires for our sins to be washed away. Sins are washed away by the blood, not by the waters of baptism. It is at the event of baptism that God appropriates the blood of Jesus in order that our sins be washed away. Our faith brings us to the water, but it is God’s work to wash us clean in the blood of His Son. No literal water will ever wash away one sin. However, there is no greater illustration to demonstrate the washing of the blood of Jesus than when one is literally immersed in water.

Since God knew that we needed a point of reference in our lives where we could confidently affirm that our sins were gone, then He promised He would do His work of forgiveness when we manifested our faith in Him at the point of our obedience to the gospel through immersion.

If we “hold firm to the confession of our faith without wavering,”10:23 then we can have full assurance that He will deliver on His promises because our faith delivered us to obedience of the gospel. In fact, the text actually says that we should hold fast to our confession “for He is faithful who promised.”10:23 Because of the faithfulness of Jesus who went to the cross for us, we should be faithful to go through suffering for Him in order to reach our eternal redemption because of the blood of the cross.

“Morality may keep you out of jail,” Spurgeon wrote, “but it takes the blood of Jesus Christ to keep you out of hell.” The statement “Let us hold to the confession of our faith without wavering”10:23 is certainly an affirmation that one could possibly let go of the cross. But if he does, he has condemned himself to hell. The one who draws back from the blood of Jesus, is without hope. “For if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins.”10:26 One can surely fall from the faith, and thus, fall from the cleansing blood of Jesus. Those who “willfully” turn back to the Sinai law, or any religious invention of men, have no hope of entering into the holy place with the sacrificial blood of Jesus. They have thus, drawn “back to destruction.”10:39 If one becomes dull of hearing about the cross, then he will fall back into destruction. When the preaching of the corss becomes boring, then one knows he is gone. We are reminded of the sincere desire of Peter in reference to his message to his readers:

I will not be negligent to always remind you of these things, though you know and are established in the present truth. Yes, I think it right, as long as I am in this tent to stir you up by reminding you … (2 Pt 1:12,13).

The statement of Hebrews 10:37 is significant in view of what Jesus said in Luke 18:8. Verse 37 is not a quote from the Old Testament. It is a reference to the context of Jesus’ prophecy in the context of Luke 17:20 – 18:8 concerning the termination of national Israel. On the occasion of the prophecy, the Pharisees questioned Jesus concerning the coming of the kingdom of God (Lk 17:20). Contrary to their thinking concerning the kingdom, Jesus said to the Pharisees that the “the kingdom of God does not come with observation” (Lk 17:20). The kingdom of God is spiritual, not physical. The Pharisees’ physical kingdom of Israel was coming to an end, but the spiritual kingdom of God would continue forever.

In answer to the Pharisees’ misunderstanding of the kingdom of God, Jesus responded by saying that “the days will come when” they would yearn for the days of peace in which they lived while the Son of Man was with them on the earth (Lk 17:22). Jesus said of these days that were coming in their lives, “For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not occurred since the beginning of the world to this time [of His ministry], nor ever will” (Mt 24:21).

Jesus then took the questioning Pharisees into an era when turmoil would engulf them because of their rejection of Him as the Son of Man. A time was coming as “the days of Noah” (Lk 17:26,27). “The flood came and destroyed” the wicked (Lk 17:27). The wicked were taken and the righteous Noah and his family were left. A time was coming when it would be like Sodom when “it rained fire and brimstone from heaven and destroyed them all” (Lk 17:29). The wicked were taken and righteous Lot was left. Jesus concluded, “In this way it will be in the day when the Son of Man is revealed” (Lk 17:30).

Jesus was prophesying His coming in judgment on Jerusalem in A.D. 70. What the self-righteous Pharisees did not understand was that they were the spiritually dead body around which the Roman army would gather. Jesus said of them, “Wherever the body is, there will the vultures be gathered together” (Lk 17:37). The Roman army would gather around the dead body of national Israel in A.D. 70 in order to consume it.

After giving a parable of the pleas of the persecuted Christians—those who accepted Jesus as the Son of Man—Jesus concluded, “I tell you that He will bring about justice for them quickly. Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?” (Lk 18:8). Reference in the context to what Jesus states is to the Pharisees and the destruction of Jerusalem. This is the event about which the Hebrew writer refers in Hebrews 10:37.

We affirm that the reason why some Jewish Christians were considering an apostasy to the Sinai law was that they were being intimidated by the radical Jewish zealots who were at the time rising up in insurrection against the Roman Empire. The insurrection became so great that Rome once and for all decided to terminate the Jewish problem. The Hebrew writer wanted to remind his readers of what Jesus had prophesied, and what was in their near future. Those to whom the Hebrew writer directs his warning were going into apostasy. If they continued on their course, they would be taken away in the destruction of the Jewish state in A.D. 70. They would be taken away just as the wicked in the days of both Noah and Lot. So the following translation of Hebrews 10:39 is appropriate: “But we are not of those who draw back to destruction ….” The writer was warning that if his readers went back to Judaism, they were going back to destruction, which future destruction they learned from Jesus’ prophecy of the destruction of Jerusalem (See Mt 24; Lk 21).

Every judgment of God in time is an illustration of His judgment that will take place at the end of time. Those Jewish Christians who were contemplating a return to the Levitical faith of national Israel, were in danger of suffering the consequences of God’s judgment on national Israel in A.D. 70. It is not surprising, therefore, that after Jesus spoke of the judgment of God on Israel in time in the context of Matthew 24, that He would continue to warn everyone in Matthew 25 of God’s judgment that is coming at the end of time. For everyone on earth there is an impending judgment placed on the world that will come. In this judgment that is yet to come, the disobedient will be separated from the righteous. The disobedient will suffer the same fate as the devil and his angels (Mt 25:41). The righteous will go into eternal life (Mt 25:34,46). We give heed to the exhortations of Hebrews, therefore, as the readers to whom the writer initially directed the letter. If we turn from Jesus Christ, we too will be drawing back into destruction that will come at the end of time when Jesus comes again (2 Th 1:6-9).

We have come unto an awesome sacrifice, one that has eternal consequences. With this appreciation, we can understand how foolish the readers of the Hebrew document were in their efforts to return to the animal sacrifices of the Sinai law. We can understand the uselessness of all those today who carry on with similar animal sacrifices in their system of humanly devised religiosity.

It “was necessary that the copies of things” should be purified with sacrifices, but “the heavenly things themselves” must be purified “with better sacrifices than” those that originated from this earth, that is, animal sacrifices.9:23 We have now come into a covenant that has the better sacrifice of Jesus.

We can only imagine the frustration of the Levitical priests of the Sinai covenant. Theirs was a futile effort of “daily ministering and offering time after time the same sacrifices that can never take away sins.”10:11 They knew that the blood of a killed animal could never rectify the spiritual gap that exists between man and God. They knew that a sacrificed animal was useless in mending the separation that was caused by their inability to keep law perfectly in order to be justified before God (See Is 59:2). Theirs was a ministry of frustration. Nevertheless, they remained faithful in offering animal sacrifices in view of the fact that something greater must be in the final plan of God.

When the fullness of time came, the better was reveal when God sent forth His Son (Gl 4:4). And “by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.”10:14 The cross was a day of historical celebration. What was a momentary time of grief for the immediate friends of Jesus who stood at the foot of the cross, later became a joyous event when they encountered Him alive after the resurrection. On the day of Pentecost, it was revealed that the cross was the event for which all the sons of Abraham by faith had waited for millennia.

A new covenant relationship was activated with the words from the cross, “It is finished” (Jn 19:30). What Jesus had finished on the cross had been in the foreknowledge of God since the first day He breathed into Adam the breath of life. The sacrificial offering of the cross declared God just in creating those whom He knew could not live perfectly before Him. If there had been no plan when the first “Let there be …” came forth from God, then God would have been fiendish to create those whom He knew could never live a life of self-justification. The foreplanned blood offering of God was thus in place before the first human existed who needed redemption (See 1 Pt 1:17-21).

Our encouragement comes from the fact that “by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.”10:14 Such was not the promise of the old covenant relationship that God had with Israel. Since those who lived under that covenant assumed that the blood of bulls and goats could not take away sins, they looked forward to the One whom God promised to raise up from among them as He raised up Moses (Dt 18:15). It would be this One who would bring in what the prophets foretold: “This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days ….”10:16

The new covenant that was enacted was different because it was based on something far different than the old Sinai covenant. Under the old covenant, Israel as a nation was in a covenant relationship with God. Therefore, when a babe was born, he or she was born into a covenant relationship with God. And because Israel was in a covenant relationship with God, then sacrifices of necessity had to be made for the people as a nation. As children grew up under this covenant, they had to be taught the reason for the sacrifices.

But under the new covenant everything changed. God had promised under the new covenant, “I will put My laws in their hearts and on their minds I will write them.”10:16 (See Jr 31:33). Sacrifice under the new covenant was necessary, but the sacrifice that was made resulted in the declaration, “And their sins and iniquities I will remember no more.”10:17 Since “it was not possible that the blood of bulls and goats could take away sins”10:4 under the old, the priests had to stand “daily ministering and offering time after time the same sacrifices” that could never take away sins.10:11 Under the new, however, Jesus “offered one sacrifice for sins forever,” and then He “sat down at the right hand of God.”10:12

But there was a difference between the old and new in reference to the time the sacrifice was made for those who would be in a covenant relationship with God. Under the old Sinai covenant, a Jewish babe was born into a covenant relationship with God. The newly born babe had no choice concerning the establishment of this covenant. And thus, from childhood the Jewish child had to be taught the law (conditions) of the covenant. The sacrifices were then offered year by year as one sought to remain in his covenant relationship with God. The sacrifices, therefore, were made after the acts of sin.

But under the new and better covenant, everything changed. The offering for sin has been made once and for all time before we sinned. Jesus has “offered one sacrifice for sins forever.”10:12 For all those who have life after the cross, during His earthly ministry Jesus revealed to His audience the key to understanding what would come in the lives of His immediate audience: “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up” (Jn 3:14). Jesus continued, “When you have lifted up the Son of Man, then you will know that I am He …” (Jn 8:28). And why? Jesus revealed, “And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to Me” (Jn 12:32).

We are drawn to Christ because we are drawn to the sacrifice of the cross that has already taken place. We realize in this sacrifice of the past that we have the promise, “their sins and iniquities I will remember no more.”10:17 It is not that one is born into a covenant relationship with God today as under the old Sinai covenant. We are drawn into the new covenant relationship with God because of what God did for us in the past. The drawing power of the cross is determined by our knowledge of the Son of God and His offering.

Our present relationship with God continues if we continue to grow in the knowledge of Jesus (2 Pt 3:18). The Hebrew writer cautioned, “But if any man draws back, My soul will have no pleasure in him.”10:38 Throughout the book, therefore, the writer emphasizes the emotional power of understanding the function of the cross in our lives. It is our knowledge of the function of the blood and cross that draws us to Jesus. Through the cross we have “a better hope, through which we draw near to God.”7:19 Therefore, let us continue to “draw near with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith ….”10:22 If in our hearts we lose the drawing power of the cross, then we will “draw back to destruction.”10:39

It is at this point in the Hebrew document that we understand what the writer previously meant when he said that his readers had become dull of hearing.5:11 Their knowledge of Jesus and the cross had waned, and thus, the drawing power of the cross had subsequently waned. When the sacrifice of the cross fails to bring a gasp of awe in our hearts, then we know that we have become dull of hearing. And if we have become dull, then it is time to study this document of the Holy Spirit.

In order to prepare His disciples for the cross, Jesus held up the cup during His last Passover meal and said to His disciples, “For this is My blood of the covenant that is shed for many for the remission of sins” (Mt 26:28). And now we know why Peter said to those who believed on Jesus on the day of Pentecost in Acts 2:38, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins.” His Jewish audience knew that there was no remission without blood. They also knew that unless one somehow connected with that blood of sprinkling, then there would be no sanctification. Peter’s statement on the day of Pentecost explained how they could connect with the blood of Jesus, and thus, receive the redemption that is in Christ through His blood. “In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of His grace” (Ep 1:7). When one is baptized into Jesus (Rm 6:3), he is baptized into the realm of the continual cleansing blood of Jesus (1 Jn 1:7). The minds of about 3,000 people on the day of Pentecost had not become dull of hearing. They were willing to hear, and thus, they asked what to do in order to reconnect with God (At 2:37).

By faith, individuals responded on that day to the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross. They were drawn to Jesus, and subsequently sought remission of sins in the cleansing blood of Jesus that flows from the cross. When one comes forth from the grave of water, and subsequently comes into a covenant relationship with God in Christ, he has been washed of sins because of the cross of the past (At 22:16). This is not all.

But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin (1 Jn 1:7).

The story only gets better when we are delivered from this body of death into the loving arms of the One who made a onetime sacrifice in the past that drew us into a covenant relationship with God. In this covenant, we do not need to be taught to know the offering of the cross. It was because of our knowledge of the sacrifice of the cross that we were drawn to Jesus. It was our own volition to establish a covenant with God based on that knowledge, as opposed to those who lived under the Sinai covenant who had to be taught to “know God” because they were already in a covenant with God.

Because the Jewish child was in a covenant with God at the time of his birth, he had to be taught the conditions of the covenant that God had established with Israel. But because we are taught to know Jesus before we make a decision to be drawn into a covenant relationship with God, we already know the conditions of the covenant at the time we are cleansed with the blood of the covenant. And because of the continual cleansing blood of Jesus as we walk in the light, God promises every day, “Sins and iniquities I will remember no more.”10:17 Those sins that were washed away in baptism, are gone forever. Those sins that we commit while faithfully walking the light are also gone because of our continual confession and the sufficient sacrifice of Jesus on the cross in the past. We do not, as Israel under the Sinai covenant, have to remember our sins throughout the year at the end of every year when the high priest on the day of atonement offered the blood of animals.

And just in case we might forget the beauty of the new covenant we have with God, the Hebrew writer made one last statement in reference to the continuing effect of the cross.

Now the God of peace who brought up our Lord Jesus from the dead, that great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, equip you in every good work to do His will.13:20,21

The covenant we have established with God through our faith response to the cross, has eternal consequences. When one establishes this covenant with God through obedience to the gospel, he enjoys the blessings of an eternal sacrifice. It is eternal because of the effect of the sacrifice. Jesus “offered one sacrifice for sins forever.”10:12 Even when we come into heaven we can be assured that the covenant continues because the effect of the sacrifice continues. It is an eternal covenant because of the eternal effect of the cross.

In contrast to the old covenant and law that God established with Israel at Mount Sinai, Jesus Christ “appeared as a high priest of good things to come9:11 … by His own blood.”9:12 So the Hebrew writer concludes with Jesus’ right to function as “the mediator of the new covenant.”9:15 His offering to function as the mediator of the new covenant was based on the sufficiency of His blood sacrifice with which “He entered once for all into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption.”9:12

The sufficiency of His sacrifice is exemplified in the fact that it was not only for our sins this side of the cross, but for those, who through faith, were obedient to the law of the Sinai covenant before the cross. Therefore, He is the mediator of the new covenant, “so that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions committed under the first covenant,” they too may “receive the promise of eternal inheritance.”9:15

The writer of Hebrews has now set forth the reason why a new covenant had to be established. He explains why it had to be sanctified by death. “For where a covenant is, the death of the one who made it must be established.”9:16 This is necessary because “a covenant is ratified upon death.”9:17 A person may write a will (testament) concerning all things that he seeks to leave with those who follow him. But as long as he lives, his will (testament) has no legal power to distribute his possessions. And so it is with a covenant, “since it has no force while the one who made it lives.”9:17 There must be the death of the testator before his testament (will) is activated.

The Holy Spirit wants to remind us that the first covenant was inaugurated through the death of something that was living (See Ex 24:5-8). When Moses had finished reading before the people all the law of the covenant, “he took the blood of calves and of goats, with water and scarlet wool and hyssop, and sprinkled both the book [of the law] and all the people.”9:19 A great number of animals died in order that blood could be used to ratify the covenant. Moses’ actions came with the pronouncement, “This is the blood of the covenant that God has commanded you.”9:20

In order to sanctify all the instruments the priests were to use in their ministry of the covenant Moses “sprinkled with blood both the tabernacle and all the vessels of the ministry.”9:21 The reason for all this “sprinkling” was that death must occur in order to provide the blood that is used to set apart (sanctify) that which was to be dedicated to God. The Hebrew writer wanted us to reflect on the fact that “without shedding of blood there is no remission,”9:22 that is, there is no bringing into force the benefit of a covenant with God for those who seek to be set apart for God. In this way, therefore, because of the blood of the covenant, God is able to establish a covenant with the obedient. Through the blood of Jesus, the sins that have separated us from God are remitted. In reference to our covenant with God, “everything is to be cleansed with blood.”9:22 Under the new covenant, death had to occur in order that blood be provided to cleanse us of our sin that continually separated us from God before we obeyed the gospel.

“Therefore, it was necessary that the copies of things in the heavens should be purified [through blood] with these.”9:23 “But the heavenly things themselves [must be sanctified] with better sacrifices than these [sacrifices of animals].”9:23 It was not possible for Jesus to take any blood of any animal on earth in order to enter into heaven. His function as our high priest of the new covenant had to be founded upon His blood. There was no redemption through the blood of animals.10:1-4 And since there was no redemption through the blood of anything that originated from this world, then redemption had to be provided by that which was not of this world. If we would be permitted to use the word, it took an “amalgamation” of the heavenly and the earthly in order to provide an effective sacrifice for those who would transition from the earthly to the heavenly. This was the end result of incarnation, and thus, an explanation of how the eternal Son of God became that which was a sufficient sacrifice for humanity. The Word “was in the beginning with God,” but “the Word was made flesh …” (Jn 1:2,14). The Word was made flesh in order to offer a sacrifice that would transition those of the flesh into the eternal realm of being with God.

When Jesus ascended into heaven, He did not go without blood. The priests on earth “entered into the holy places made with hands.”9:24 But Jesus entered into the true substance of that which casts the shadow to the earthly, which substance was not made with hands. Jesus entered “into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us.”9:24 He did not ascend unto God “with the blood of another,” that is, the blood of an animal.9:25 Neither did He have to enter continually with blood into the presence of God as did the priests of the earthly tabernacle. In contrast to the priestly ministry of the Sinai covenant, the Hebrew writer informs us that Jesus has “now once at the end of the ages … appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself.”9:26 When Jesus entered into heaven on behalf of all those who are now in a new covenant relationship with God, He did it once with His own blood. Therefore, when it comes to blood sacrifices in reference to covenants with God, all killing of animals for sacrifices was finalized in Christ. With His own sacrifice He has cleansed forever those who would draw near unto God through Him.

The good news is that Jesus in His ministry on earth was not all there was of Jesus. In fact, He appeared to make the way for the obedient to find their way to the best there is now. And what the Son of God is now in heaven is our hope for what will be in the future. This is the meaning of Paul’s statement in 2 Corinthians 5:16: “Even though we have known Christ according to the flesh, yet now we know Him thus no more.” Our knowledge and appreciation of who the Son of God is now is the foundation of our hope. We thus seek to move beyond knowing Jesus only according to His fleshly ministry. We seek to have assurance through His present ministry.

“Christ appeared as a high priest of good things to come.”9:11The wording in this statement is significant. The statement says that He came as a high priest, that is, He did not come to become a high priest. The babe lying in a manger in Bethlehem was our high priest. When he was about thirty years of age, He began the function of His high priesthood ministry in the flesh while on earth. His earthly ministry was in preparation to procure the sacrifice of Himself, with which sacrifice He entered into the sanctuary of heaven at His ascension.

In contrast to the Levitical high priest, Jesus’ priesthood was not finalized with His death. His high priesthood continues today and into our future in His heavenly existence. During His earthly ministry, therefore, Jesus was the offering of God in preparation for the altar of the cross. He was a sacrifice without blemish (without sin4:15) who was destined to take His own flesh to the cross as a sacrificial offering on our behalf (See Jn 10:15-17).

The Old Testament tabernacle (tent) was made from the wool of sheep. It was temporary. God gave instructions in the Old Testament for its remaking every few years. But in comparison to that tent that wasted away in the heat of the sun and weather, Jesus came with “a greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands.”9:11It is thus not a tabernacle that originated from anything that is “of this creation.”9:11 The tabernacle in which Jesus functions as our high priest was not made with wood and wool of this world. It is not, therefore, temporary as the things of this world.

Since the tabernacle of Jesus is not of this world, then with His blood He was able to redeem those who compose His tabernacle. Under the Sinai law, “the blood of goats and calves”9:12 were fruitlessly used to deal with the sins of the people who lived.10:1-4 The high priest of the Sinai law entered into the holy of holies of the tabernacle on the day of atonement every year. He entered with the blood of animals to make sacrifice for the people. But in his reasoning, the high priest knew the futility of offering the blood of bulls and goats for the sins of the people. He rationalized that there must be something better that was coming. Therefore, out of legal obedience to the law, he faithfully carried on with the offering of animal blood.

“By His own blood”9:12 Jesus entered into heaven on behalf of the sins of those who now compose His spiritual tabernacle. The gospel news is that “in Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of His grace” (Ep 1:7). And in contrast to the repetitious annual entrance of the high priest into the holy of holies under the Sinai law, Jesus “entered once for all into the holy place”9:12 (See Lv 16:12-15).There was finality to the sacrifice on the cross. And thus, He “obtained eternal redemption”9:12 through His blood for all those who sign up for a covenant with Him.

The “eternal redemption” happened only once. In other words, the cross was a once-and-for-all-eternity event that had eternal consequences. Jesus does not have to offer Himself continually on the cross to redeem His people. The matter of our redemption was a onetime event in history. “Eternal” in this context thus focuses on the result of the redemptive offering. The redemption continues into eternity because of the absolute of the cross. Redemption was accomplished at the cross, and thus, it is made sure because of the eternality of the One who made the sacrifice. Jesus will never offer Himself again for that which continues to exist.

The Hebrew writer now turns to the reasoning of his readers. A question is asked. The question is that “if the blood [of animals] sanctifies for the purifying of the flesh,”9:13 then “how much more the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without blemish to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works …?”9:14

If there was sanctification of sin under the Sinai law in view of the cross, then while living in the reality of sanctification this side of the cross, would it not be reasonable to conclude that the reality gives greater assurance than the shadow of animal blood? Those living under the Sinai law offered in expectation of something that would accomplish sanctification. The high priest knew that that which was of this creation could not redeem those in the flesh in order that they be sanctified before God who is not of the flesh. With every animal sacrifice, there was the realization that there was an insufficiency in the blood of animals. We assume that the priests of the Sinai law expected something to come, but no one had any idea that it would be a blood offering of the incarnate Son of God. This mystery was hidden from the minds of men until the event happened (See Ep 3:4,5).

But when the One who was without blemish was offered on behalf of our sins, we have assurance that His sacrifice was final and sufficient. It was sufficient even for all those who lived before the cross who faithfully offered the blood of animals. They too were sanctified by the cross. It was through Jesus “whom God has set forth to be an atoning sacrifice by His blood through faith in order to declare His righteousness for the remission of sins in the past because of the forbearance of God” (Rm 3:25).

The cleansing blood of the cross was offered for all men for all time. Since there was no satisfactory cleansing power in the blood of animals,10:1-4 then the cross was necessary for those who were confined to the sacrifices of the Sinai law. But now, Jesus “is the mediator of a new covenant, so that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions committed under the first covenant, those who have been called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance.”9:15 The cleansing power of the cross was applied to sin in retrospect when any animal without blemish was offered for the sins of the people under the Sinai law.

It was not that the sins of the people were rolled forward to the sacrifice of the cross. The sanctification of the cross was rolled back to those who by faith offered the blood of animals for their sins. There was forgiveness of sins before the cross, but the forgiveness was only accomplished in view of the cross. The sacrifices of the Sinai law were offered, therefore, in hope that there was something coming that would accomplish that which the people knew could not be realized with the blood of animals.

God sees our time from beginning to end. He thus functioned in reference to redemption from the perspective of “beginning to ending.” He could forgive before the cross because He knew the certainty of the cross. There was redemption through the blood of Jesus before the cross, therefore, though the people were ignorant of the sacrifice of the cross. The redemption was based on the faith of those who obediently offered animals in expectation that God had something greater for the faithful than the shadow in which they lived.

Our knowledge of the cross today gives us no advantage in sanctification over those who through faith obeyed what God required for an offering under the Sinai law. We only have the advantage of the knowledge of the cross, but it is still our faith that gives us assurance of forgiveness in the cross. Because the blood of the cross was sufficient through the faith of those who lived before the cross, then they too “receive the promise of eternal inheritance.”9:15Their walk with God was based on promise. Ours is based on the reality of the cross. But the end result of both is the same.

The Hebrew writer concludes the “once-and-for-all” offering at the cross, by contrasting it with the annual offerings of the high priest of the Sinai law. If the offering of Jesus was not sufficient as a onetime event in history, then He would have had “to suffer often since the foundation [creation] of the world.”9:26The sufficiency of His offering is in the fact that “now once at the end of the ages He has appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself.”9:26 Jesus needed to suffer only once. And because He needed to suffer only once, demands the conclusion that the offering of the cross was entirely sufficient for all sins for all time.

“Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many.”9:28 When He comes again, it will not be for offering, “but for salvation.”9:28 Because His offering was sufficient, then He can appear again for our salvation, not for our condemnation. This is the function of our high priest on our behalf. And for this reason we can come to the throne of grace with boldness. We can therefore patiently wait for Him because our faith is in the eternal redemption we have through His blood.

The high priests who were under the Sinai covenant could not come before God without offerings for the sins of themselves and the people. But it was different with Jesus. When Jesus was presented before the “Majesty in the heavens,” He too had to come with an offering. It was “necessary that this high priest [Jesus] also have something to offer.”8:3 However, it was not “offerings” in the plural, but in the singular, for He offered Himself once for all time. And it was not an offering for His own sins, for He was without sin.

The earthly priests “served a copy and shadow of heavenly things,”8:5 and thus their function was an illustration of that which was to come after them. They were in preparation for that which casts the shadow. And that which casts the shadow was the offering of Jesus on the cross. The insufficiency of their offerings and priesthood exemplified the necessity of the offering of Jesus that was yet to come.

Moses was instructed that he “make all things according to the pattern”8:5 (Ex 25:40). The “pattern” was for the tabernacle and the order of priesthood for Aaron and his sons. If the pattern was not followed, then the people would have been confused concerning the substance that was to come. The people would have had a distorted view of the “excellent ministry” of Jesus and His offering. Their function according to the pattern was maintained in order to present a true understanding of the substance that was to come. For this reason, therefore, we understand that the pattern for priesthood that was given at Mt. Sinai was not from man, but from God.

In chapter 7 Jesus was the “guarantee of a better covenant.”7:22 In chapter 8 He is the “mediator of a better covenant.”8:6 God’s personal oath that established Jesus as a high priest after the order of Melchizedek guaranteed the better covenant that we now have with God. Because of this guarantee, “He has obtained a more excellent ministry”8:6 of mediatorship of a new covenant. “Therefore, He is able also to save those to the uttermost who come to God through Him, seeing He always lives to make intercession ….”7:25 And since “there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus,” then we do not hesitate to approach God through Jesus Christ (1 Tm 2:5). There is absolutely no other medium through whom men must approach God (At 4:12).

The expectation of the Israelites was encouraged by one very important fact concerning the conditions for keeping the first covenant. In order to keep the covenant, and in order to find redemption through animal sacrifices, the conditions of the covenant had to be kept perfectly. But the people knew that this was an impossibility. In reference to the law of the covenant, the people knew “that a man is not justified by works of law” (Gl 2:16). One cannot be justified by perfect keeping of law simply because it is impossible for any man to live perfectly under law. All sin (Rm 3:23). And one sin makes a lawbreaker, and a violator of the conditions of the covenant.

So the Hebrew writer introduces his readers to the “fault” of the law of the Sinai covenant. “For if that first covenant had been faultless, then no place would have been sought for the second.”8:7 This statement might lead us to conclude that there was a problem both with the covenant and the law by which the people were to live in order to keep the covenant. But this would be a wrong conclusion. We must not conclude that there was any fault with either. On the contrary, “the [Sinai law] is holy, and the commandment holy and just and good” (Rm 7:12). The Sinai law and covenant were perfect for what they were designed to accomplish.

Paul explained, “The law was our headmaster to bring us [Jews] to Christ so that we might be justified by faith” (Gl 3:24). One of the purposes of the Sinai law was to preserve the faithful of Israel until the coming of the Redeemer. When that to which Israel was brought finally arrived, then there was a change. Paul continued, “But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a headmaster” (Gl 3:25). The headmaster (the law) served its purpose. And once the purpose was fulfilled, then there was no more a need for the Sinai law.

The fault was not with the law, but with the people who were under the law. There was no possible way for them to justify themselves through perfect law-keeping, though the Jews were to keep the law as best they could until it had accomplished its purpose (See Gl 2:16).

The Hebrew writer clarified the problem of the Jews’ efforts to keep the law: “For finding fault with them,” he explained, “… the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant ….”8:8 The fault was with the people who could not live sinlessly under the law. Regardless of what law God would give to man, we must understand that no law is given by God for the purpose of producing salvation. On the contrary, law in and of itself brings death, for no one can keep law perfectly in order to justify himself before God.

The reason law cannot produce salvation is because those to whom the law is given are at fault. Those who lived under the Sinai law knew this. And for this reason, Paul reasoned with some Jews on his first mission journey that by Jesus “all who believe are justified from all things from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses” (At 13:39).

There should be no difficultly in understanding the Holy Spirit’s argument on this main point. Since there is no justification under law through perfect obedience, then there is no salvation under law alone. Something else is needed to maintain our covenant relationship with God. A new law and covenant were needed. And that which was needed with law was an eternal atoning sacrifice that was sufficient to continue redemption to those who violate law.

Since the honest sinners under the Sinai law knew this, they groaned for deliverance from law in order to be justified by mercy and grace. Several centuries after the giving of the Sinai law, and the failure of those who lived under that law who were on their way into Babylonian captivity because they lived contrary to the law, God promised through Jeremiah, “Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah ….”8:8 (See Jr 31:31).

At the time the Hebrew writer penned the above quotation from Jeremiah 31, the spiritual relief had already come through Jesus. The new covenant came with Jesus. And with the new covenant, there came a new law. So the writer concluded with the following statement: “‘A new covenant,’ He has made the first obsolete.”8:13 At the time he wrote these words, the old was “becoming obsolete and growing old.”8:13 It was “ready to vanish away.”8:13

At the time the letter of Hebrews was written, the old Sinai law had years before been nailed to the cross in A.D. 30. The new covenant was in force. However, at the time he wrote, the priests of the Sinai law were continuing to “offer gifts according to the law.”8:4 But this ministry of offering the blood of bulls and goats was also about to conclude within less than a decade after the letter of Hebrews was written. The destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 would bring a total end to the Sinai priesthood ministry in that the temple and the altar would be completely destroyed. The Jewish priesthood would be either killed in the destruction or dispersed throughout the world as slaves of the Roman Empire.

We conclude, therefore, that a subliminal purpose for the writing of the letter of Hebrews was to save lives, particularly the lives of those Christian Jews in Jerusalem who persisted in continuing the offering of the sacrifices at the temple altar (See At 21:17-25). The writer pleads his case for Jesus in order to discourage the first Jewish recipients throughout the Roman Empire from going to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover and to participate in the offerings that had long vanished away in Christ (See Gl 3:26-29).

God gave the Jews forty years to transition from the cross in A.D. 30 to the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. The death of the covenant and law came with the establishment of the new high priest in heaven. It was now time for all Israel to flee from all the shadows of God’s covenant with national Israel that was established 1445 years before at Mount Sinai. The historical statement of God in the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 was that His covenant and law with national Israel were over. Through the Hebrew writer, God was telling potential apostate Jewish Christians not to turn back to that which will physically terminate in the destruction of Jerusalem.10:39

By chapter 8, the Hebrew writer comes to the main point, or conclusion to the things he has defended. Jesus is three things in reference to the inadequacies of the Levitical priesthood: (1) Jesus is our high priest who is seated in heaven at the right hand of God.8:1 (2) Jesus is a minister of the sanctuary and tabernacle that the Lord built.8:2 (3) Jesus is our mediator of the new covenant.8:6 By this ministry we now know Jesus. And because Jesus functions “in the heavens,”8:1 we seek to maintain our covenant relationship with Him because of the “more excellent ministry”8:6 He performs on our behalf.

There is a difference between the priesthood of Jesus and the Levitical priests who came through the mandate of the Sinai law. The Levitical priests under the Sinai law were priests of this world, having been appointed by the law. Their service was thus confined to this world. But we “have such a high priest who is seated at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens.”8:1 The Hebrew writer’s argument to those Jewish Christians who were considering a move back to the Levitical priesthood was that they were being earthly. They were certainly theologically unwise to exchange the heavenly priesthood of Jesus for a priesthood that was confined to this world. The writer thus argues by contrasting the heavenly priesthood of Jesus with the earthly priesthood of the Levitical law. One was appointed by the direct pronouncement of God, and the other through the mandate of law.

The Levitical priests of this world ministered in an earthly tent that continually wasted away in the weather to worthless rags. It had to be rebuilt every few years. The sanctuary of this tent was thus temporary. But in contrast to the earthly sanctuary of the tabernacle that wasted away with use, Jesus has gone into a heavenly sanctuary, having built the “true tabernacle that the Lord pitched, and not man.”8:2 Since it is heavenly, and thus not of this world, it will not waste away as all things of this world.

(We are sure the Levitical priests wearied themselves with the continual moving of the physical tabernacle of the Old Testament from one place to another. But the tabernacle in which Jesus now functions as our high priest is heavenly. It will never wear out. It is not as the tabernacle of Israel that had to be moved and rebuilt continually throughout the centuries. We can understand why David, who was frustrated with moving the tabernacle, offered to God the option to build a permenant temple (tabernacle) that would not wear out. At the time, God knew that Israel would diminish in faithfulness to the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin. He thus relinquished to David’s desires. Solomon, David’s son, therefore, built the temple.)

Under the Levitical system, the high priest had to offer gifts in a physical tabernacle. This all transpired before Jesus ascended to heaven to assume the function of an eternal high priest. He offered only one sacrifice. After the sacrifice was offered, He began His function as a mediator on behalf of those of His tabernacle. Under the Sinai law, the priests came before the Lord with the offering of “gifts according to the law.”8:4 Such was the duty of the high priest, for it was appointed to him “to offer gifts and sacrifices.”8:3 Since Jesus came to the Father as a high priest, He too had to come with “something to offer.”8:3 And that which He had to offer was the offering of Himself for the people on whose behalf He would mediate.

We must conclude that what Jesus sacrificed was something that was forever. It was not only His sacrifice on the cross, but something that would continue throughout eternity. Since His was an eternal sacrifice, then there had to be eternal residuals on His part as to what He gave up for those He would eternally mediate. When He gave up His form of God through incarnation, we surmise that the incarnational sacrifice He made for us began with the cry of a babe in a manger in Bethlehem, but did not end with a cry from the cross, “It is finished” (Jn 19:30). He completed the plan of redemption at the cross, but the results of the redemption continued after the cross. The sacrificial offering for the redemption of those who walk by faith was finished, but the extent of His commitment to dwell among His brethren as their high priest was not.

His incarnate and sacrificial body was changed in the resurrection. That into which it was transformed was eternal. The apostles witnessed the changed body of Jesus after His resurrection, which body they saw ascend into heaven (See At 1:9,10). John personally witnessed and touched the resurrected body of Jesus (1 Jn 1:1). But he confessed,

Beloved, now we are the children of God, and it has not yet been revealed what we will be. But we know that when He appears, we will be like Him, for we will see Him as He is(1 Jn 3:2).

Jesus is not a ghost floating around in a heavenly realm. In His resurrected body, He ascended. John affirms that we will see Him as He now is when He appears again. We will not only see Him, but our bodies will be transformed into what His body now is. Paul called this a mystery, and such it is. In our resurrection, our mortal bodies will put on immortality; our perishable body will be changed into that which will not decay away (See 1 Co 15:35-57). All this is enough to make us greatly wonder what we will be. But we can be assured that we will receive a new habitation from God, one that is not confined to the sufferings of this world, but one that will be eternal as the Son (See 2 Co 5:1-8). It will be in this new habitation that we will be personally present with our eternal high priest. It is then that we will have a truly personal relationship with the Son of God.

Now if Jesus “were on earth,”8:4 none of this would be possible. He could not be our high priest since the Sinai law provided priests who continued to minister the sacrifices. From the time the Sinai law came into force at Mount Sinai, there were “priests who offer gifts according to the law.”8:4 However, what the earthly priests served was only “a copy and shadow of heavenly things.”8:5 All the services of the priests under the Sinai law ministered were a copy and shadow of that which was to come. The copy was not the true substance from which it came. The shadow was not the substance. It was the substance that casts the shadow, to which substance the Old Testament priests looked forward.

God commanded Moses to make the tabernacle according to the pattern that was given to him on Mount Sinai. Those who ministered in the shadow of the substance, ministered according to the pattern that was revealed on Mount Sinai. Moses was instructed to make correctly the shadow in order that Israel not misunderstand the substance when it arrived. At the time the Hebrew writer wrote, Jesus was ministering according to the true tabernacle that He constructed, which tabernacle He was, when through incarnation, He tabernacled with men. It was the priesthood of Jesus that casts the shadow of those things that led to His tabernacle and priesthood.

Jesus has now “obtained a more excellent ministry”8:6 than the ministry of those who ministered in the shadow from Sinai to the ascension of Jesus. His ministry is more excellent because He is “the mediator of a better covenant that was established on better promises.”8:6 The foundation upon which His ministry is established is far better than what the Sinai law could provide. The Levitical high priest to whom the Hebrew writer referred at the time of writing needed to make a decision. He needed to decide whether he would continue to minister in the shadow, or hand over his high priesthood to the One who cast the shadow. Of course he refused, and subsequently, God had to physically remove him when the temple worship was destroyed in A.D. 70.

Covenants are based on the trust of the covenanted parties. Each party obligates himself to conditions for the establishment of the covenant. Once the covenant is established, then each party is obligated to keep the conditions of the covenant (See Book 24, Authentic Church, chapter 5, BRL, africainternational.org).

The Sinai covenant that God made with Israel was guaranteed on the basis of God’s initiative and was sanctified with the offering of the blood of animals. But as our high priest after the order of Melchizedek, Jesus was “made a guarantee of a better covenant.”7:22The guarantee of this better covenant “was with an oath”7:21 from God. It was based on God’s promise that Jesus would continually be our high priest. The Father said to the Son, “The Lord has sworn and will not change His mind, ‘You are a priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.’”7:21

Before the Sinai covenant, the high priesthood of Melchizedek was without beginning and ending. Melchizedek was the king of Salem. The word “Salem” means peace, and thus, the reference was fitting for Jesus to be the king of peace among the redeemed.7:2 (See Ps 110). Therefore, it was appropriate for the Hebrew writer to illustrate the unending high priesthood of Jesus as an eternal blood offering that sanctified the new covenant which was also eternal. The result of His offering was without end since we must always live under a covenant relationship with God if we would live forever.

The new covenant is better because it came with a high priest who was designated such as Melchizedek. God appointed Melchizedek directly as a high priest. And in such a manner He designated Jesus as our high priest. The God who never changes His mind in reference to covenants, swore through the cross that Jesus would be a priest forever. And because of the eternality of Jesus, He is made the guarantee of the better covenant that will not pass away. The eternality of the covenant is based on the eternality of the priesthood of Jesus.

The ministering priests of the Sinai covenant had a “death problem” in reference to their officiating on behalf of the people. The problem was that it is appointed that all men die.9:27 And because the priests of the Sinai covenant died, “they were prevented by death from continuing”7:23 their priesthood before God on behalf of the people.

But with the Son of God, everything changed. “Because He continues forever,” Jesus ministers with “an unchangeable priesthood”7:24 for a covenant that is without end. It is for this reason, therefore, that “He is able also to save those to the uttermost who come to God through Him.”7:25 In contrast to the changing of the priests of the old covenant, Jesus is unchangeable. He officiates as “an unchangeable priesthood.”7:24 The reason is that “He always lives to make intercession for them”7:25 (See Rm 8:34). His intercession on behalf of the people continues without end because He is without end.

Jude was so confident of the intercession of Jesus that he concluded his short letter with the words,

Now to Him [Jesus] who is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the presence of His glory with exceeding joy …” (Jd 24).

All religions that are invented by men function with holy men, priests, witch doctors or a dalai lama. The problem with these religions is that the spiritual leaders die. If the faith of the adherents is based on the existence of the spiritual leader, then the faith often dies with the death of the spiritual leader.

Israel was reminded at the funeral of every high priest that their faith would have been terminal if God had not ordained that an heir of Aaron would always take the place of the dead high priest. But the frail humanity of the high priest of the Sinai law came to an end in the Son of God who was “made a guarantee of a better covenant”7:22 “Such a high priest was appropriate for us”7:26